Probing dynamics of water mass transfer in organic porous photocatalyst water-splitting materials by neutron spectroscopy
Mohamed Zbiri, Catherine M. Aitchison, Reiner S. Sprick, Andrew I., Cooper, Anne A. Y. Guilbert

TL;DR
This study uses neutron spectroscopy to investigate how the structure and porosity of covalent triazine-based frameworks influence water mass transfer, which is critical for optimizing photocatalysts in solar-driven hydrogen production.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the relationship between chemical design, structure, and water dynamics in porous photocatalysts for water splitting.
Findings
CTF-CN has smaller surface area and less water uptake than CTF-2.
Structural softness affects water mobility and interaction within the frameworks.
Neutron spectroscopy reveals the link between porosity, water dynamics, and photocatalytic efficiency.
Abstract
The quest for efficient and economically accessible cleaner methods to develop sustainable carbon-free energy sources induced a keen interest in the production of hydrogen fuel. This can be achieved via the water-splitting process exploiting solar energy but requiring the use of adequate photocatalysts. Covalent triazine-based frameworks (CTFs) are target photocatalysts for water-splitting. Both electronic and structural characteristics of CTFs, optical bandgaps and porosity, are directly relevant for water-splitting. These can be engineered through chemical design. Porosity can be beneficial to water-splitting by providing larger surface area for the catalytic reactions. However, porosity can also affect both charge transport within the photocatalyst and mass transfer of both reactants and products, thus impacting the overall kinetics of the reaction. We focus on the link between…
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